On 2022-05-25 22:22, Francesco Ariis wrote:
> Paper was first made in the Chinese Empire, around two millennia ago
I see that that was indeed considered what we call paper today, unlike
the ancient Egyptian papyrus.
> Sheets made with high quality pulp survived to this day.
Some sheets survive.
On 2022-05-28 20:29, Werner Koch via Gnupg-users wrote:
> Note the Brainpool curves. Seems that Redhat still patches them out of
> libgcrypt.
Why do they do that? BTW, when I search for brainpool I only find
definitions and RFC's, I seem unable to find why they are needed (or why
they would be p
Hello Werner.
Am Samstag, dem 28.05.2022 um 20:29 +0200 schrieb Werner Koch:
> On Wed, 25 May 2022 22:58, Dirk Gottschalk said:
>
> > $ gpg --with-colons --list-config curve
> > cfg:curve:cv25519;ed25519;cv448;ed448;nistp256;nistp384;nistp521;se
> > cp25
> > 6k1
>
> This should read
>
> cfg:cur
Hello Todd.
Am Samstag, dem 28.05.2022 um 16:14 -0400 schrieb Todd Zullinger via
Gnupg-users:
> Hi,
>
> Werner Koch via Gnupg-users wrote:
> > On Wed, 25 May 2022 22:58, Dirk Gottschalk said:
[...]
>
> > Note the Brainpool curves. Seems that Redhat still patches them
> > out of
> > libgcrypt.
On 5/26/2022 at 12:52 AM, "Robert J. Hansen via Gnupg-users" wrote:
So, yeah. I'm going to be solidly on the side of "no, really, paper
is
a magic technology, just be sure to talk with an archivist first to
ensure you're using the right kind of paper."
=
The other thing to consider is the I
Hi,
Dirk Gottschalk via Gnupg-users wrote:
> A workaround for this is to download the SRPM, remove the
> line '--disable-brainpool' and rebuild the package.
Ahh, excellent. That's a relatively recent change. It's
available in the Fedora (and RHEL) libgcrypt-1.10 packages
which I believe are onl